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Dr. Jai Maharaj posted:
Forwarded post:
Microsoft Word vs WordPerfect
By rey
Wednesday, January 18, 2017
Years ago, I used WordPerfect for all my academic papers.
I felt the program was more friendly toward that type of
writing, easier to cite, create footnotes, end notes,
bibliographies, etc. As Microsoft Word no longer comes as
part of the operating system package, I have been
considering my options.
My question is two-fold; is WordPerfect still a good
product? Is it superior to Microsoft Word? What do
professional writers prefer and why? (Yeah, that's three.
I guess I'm a heavy tipper.)
Thanks.
Posted by rey
End of forwarded post.
Forwarded post:
Back in 286/386 days I used to like WP 10x as much as
Word.
However, WP did an upgrade (this is a lot of years ago)
and I HATED the upgrade.
Over that same period, Word became much easier to use,
and lots more flexible. IMO.
Can you even get WP any more...?
However... as a matter of sending docs back and forth and
the interoperability with other MSFT applications....I
believe if all things were equal, meaning you�d have to
go buy WP at the same price you�d have to buy
Word....you�d want to buy and use Word.
Posted by Attention Surplus Disorder
End of forwarded post.
Forwarded post:
[ Back in 286/386 days . . .
You think YOU are old? Well, I used to work for a company
called Wang Laboratories, generally credited for
inventing Word Processing, years before the advent of the
personal computer. I remember the when the 286/286
revolution spelled doom for Wang... I'm not boasting, my
arthritis flares up when I boast...
Posted by NYAmerican
End of forwarded post.
Forwarded post:
You think yer old-timers!? Listen, sonny[s], I used to
write code for computers with vacuum tubes in them.
UNIVAC 1105 / (1964) / Basic Assembly Language (BAL) --
not to be confused with BASIC that came out of Dartmouth
much later.
I wrote code to analyze classified satellite data (CDC
6600) -- in a building so secret it was not even listed
in Lockheed's comprehensive internal phone directory --
before there were any GPS sytems.
I learned LISP from the author himself, John McCarthy.
I wrote part of the operating system & many applications
for the first full hospital information system -- Spectra
2000 -- in assembly code for a Schlumberger EMR 6135. I
debugged that system for many months -- correcting, inter
alia, errors in the daily deceased patient list --
working the graveyard shift at a hospital in an office
next to the morgue.
I wrote / analyzed / debugged programs in FORTRAN / ALGOL
/ SAIL, & installed 16-bit Nova & Eclipse machines, which
we had to boot up using fanfold paper tape.
I was the point man on the pioneer International Systems
Engineering troubleshooting team that analyzed & solved
multiple problems in the four-NOVA DG/DAC system
controlling the flow of rail cars in the Santa Fe
railyard terminus in Barstow.
I met the Peterson brothers (Salt Lake City & Sandy,
Utah) who founded WordPerfect, & helped them sell their
product as a third-party app on DG gear.
I liked WP as the best of all word processors right from
the beginning, & agitated for it as the standard at a few
companies. I finally switched to Word for compatibility
with the overwhelming # of Word documents.
I became adept at MultiPlan long before it grew into
Excel.
I loaned Stewart Brand (Whole Earth Catalog) a Victor
9000 machine so he could experiment with its newfangled
graphics.
I wrote LISP fragments to manipulate wireframe elements
of AutoCAD drawings, using the AutoLISP interpreter.
I hired the gentleman who is now the Autodesk VP of
Product, worldwide, responsible for more than $2 Billion
in sales.
This thread might just persuade me to experiment with
WordPerfect again, out of nostalgia, & well-deserved
contempt for everything MSFT.
Computers will make yer lives easier!
Posted by goldbux
End of forwarded post.
Jai Maharaj, Jyotishi
Om Shanti
http://ow.ly/UIz9w
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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